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Transcript

INVISIBLE: What The Faeries Saw When They Lost Their Children

In the flicker of VHS static and suburban silence, the Lost were raised without magic. The Fae are finally watching.

When the Fae speak of The Lost, they don’t mean death. They mean abandonment. Disconnection. Entire bloodlines of dreamwalkers and edge-dwellers left to rot in prefab houses with bad lighting and worse intentions.

RAZ’s new music video, INVISIBLE, is more than a glitchwave artifact. It’s a psychic document. A burn-scanned memory loop. It shows what the Empire never wanted to see: how badly the Lost were treated on Earth.

The 80s and 90s weren't pastel nostalgia for everyone. They were brutal, isolating, and loud in all the wrong ways. For the Fae children scattered across the Earth Realm, these decades were a kind of exile — forced into silence, medicated into obedience, filmed under fluorescent lights.

RAZ doesn’t make excuses. She spits visuals and audio like hexes.
"I guess it’s my story." That line hits like a punch through glass.

In INVISIBLE, the screens flicker with forgotten commercials, home video residue, suburban banality — and underneath it, a scream. A faerie scream. Not of rage, but of recognition.

The Fae have seen the footage now. They know what was done to their children. And they are not pleased.

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